A Malignant Tumor Developed Seven Years After Small Cell Lung Cancer Treated With Etoposide-containing Chemotherapy

Cancer Diagn Progn. 2022 Nov 3;2(6):716-719. doi: 10.21873/cdp.10166. eCollection 2022 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

Background/aim: Long-term survival of patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is rare, and, to the best of our knowledge, there has been no SCLC patient who developed second malignancy after long-term survival.

Case report: A 66-year-old woman with a history of smoking was admitted to our hospital with a nodule in her right lung. She was diagnosed with cT2aN3M0 localized-SCLC. Chest irradiation and chemotherapy including etoposide was performed. A new nodule appeared in the right lung more than 7 years after the end of treatment for SCLC. A specimen obtained by bronchoscopic biopsy was pathologically confirmed to be a non-SCLC malignancy.

Conclusion: There is a possibility of tumor development associated with etoposide, which is known to be carcinogenic, or residual tumor development from combined type SCLC. We could not confirm whether it was second malignancy or recurrence after long-term interval. The number of long-term survivors of SCLC is likely to increase in the future. The clinical course of this patient is interesting from the perspective of long-term survival of SCLC patients and might have implications for the treatment of patients with similar clinical course in the future.

Keywords: Etoposide; chemotherapy; recurrence; second malignancy; small cell lung cancer.

Publication types

  • Case Reports